Tag Archive for: Westside Rising

A Rebound Takes Root in Michigan, but Voters’ Gloom Is Hard to Shake (New York Times)

Another blustery Midwestern winter approaches, but along a blue-collar stretch of Leonard Street in this conservative, famously button-down city, an economic springtime has arrived.

The Mitten Brewing Company, less than three years old, has grown to 40 employees from 10, and is expanding across the street with gleaming new fermentation tanks. Next door, Kyle Van Strien and Jon O’Connor have gutted an 1890s dry-goods store to build Long Road Distillers. Down the block, A-1 Small Engine Repair is stirring with traffic at last, said Randy Wodarek, a co-owner, after years of “a lot of peanut butter and jelly, for sure.”

Yet the economic recovery taking root in Michigan — among the states hit hardest by the 2008 recession — has not translated into an improved political environment for officials in either party. Gov. Rick Snyder, a Republican and a computer executive who was elected four years ago as an economic Mr. Fix-It, is neck-and-neck with his Democratic challenger. Representative Gary Peters, the Detroit-area Democrat who was handpicked to succeed Senator Carl Levin, who is retiring, is struggling to maintain a lead over his Republican opponent.

The growing set of up arrows among many economic indicators has proved to be more of an abstraction to voters struggling to get by.

Jared Bernstein, a former Obama administration economist now with the liberal Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, said economic growth was up 12 percent since the recession’s end, stock prices had doubled and corporate profits were up nearly 50 percent. But median household income, adjusted for inflation, is down 3 percent. Incomes have just started ticking up, but that is because people are working longer hours, not because of rising wages.

“A lot of political scientists will tell you it’s the trend that matters,” Mr. Bernstein said. “People can take a whole lot of whacking around as long as they feel things are improving. But that’s not how it’s playing out.”

Even as employers in Michigan have added 310,000 jobs and unemployment has dropped to 7.5 percent from 14.2 percent — the best improvement in the country since the recession — voters here seem to view the glass as half empty, largely because of stagnant wages, rising living costs and diminished opportunities.

“I’ll tell you why,” said Jim Chase, a local Teamsters union organizer, over beer and pizza at the Mitten. “Because most of those jobs don’t pay nothing.”

The number of unemployed in Michigan, 357,408, is down from 686,199 in August 2009, and back to the level of March 2008. But people dropping out of the work force account for some of that change. Today, 4.4 million Michiganders have jobs, up from 4.1 million in December 2009, but that number trails the 4.7 million who had jobs in the state in February 2006.

Manufacturing has come back, with payrolls rising to 567,900 this June from 440,600 in June 2009, bringing manufacturing payrolls back to July 2008 levels, but short of the peak of 906,900 in September 1999.

The auto industry has revived, owing largely to the bailout that President Obama pushed and Republicans opposed. But a leaner, more efficient Big Three — General Motors, Ford and Chrysler — may never employ as many in the state as they once did, Mr. Peters said, nor will their suppliers.

“My gut tells me things are getting better,” said Bobby J. Hopewell, the mayor of nearby Kalamazoo, “but there are just too many people out of work.”

For more affluent business owners and executives, robust profits have meant rapidly rising wealth — and some disbelief at all the grumbling.

“People are very negative,” said Heather Johnson of Comstock Park, just north of Grand Rapids, a Republican whose husband’s industrial vacuum equipment business has been “blessed” with recent good fortune. “No matter how good people are doing, they find the few things that are wrong.”

On the lower end, the worst of the desperation has subsided, helped in part by government action. Barbara Grinwis, 63, executive director of Oasis of Hope, a free health clinic on Leonard Street, spends much of her time signing up patients for Michigan’s insurance exchange or expanded Medicaid under the president’s health care law. The clinic opened in 2007, and “I remember the first three or four years, seeing people at the end of the exam tables weeping, saying: ‘I’ve lost everything, my house, my job, my wife. I never dreamed I’d be in a free clinic,’ ” she recalled. “I’m not hearing that anymore.”

For the vast middle, however, there is a pervasive gloom. Incomes have stagnated. Many Americans have given up trying to find work.

“My generation is trying to figure out how to buy a house, how to afford that second child. We’re not feeling it,” said Jon Hoadley, a 31-year-old running as a Democrat for state representative in Kalamazoo.

“If you would’ve asked me several months ago, I would have expected both the governor and Congressman Peters to be further ahead,” said Douglas B. Roberts, director of the Institute for Public Policy and Social Research at Michigan State University. “It doesn’t really matter if you’re an R or a D. We’re just fed up.”

That sentiment is playing into races that will ultimately determine control of the Senate in November. A Pew Research Center survey conducted last month found that people’s assessment of the availability of jobs had improved, but 56 percent said their family’s incomes were falling behind living costs — about where that sentiment was in 2008 — and 45 percent said they had experienced financial hardships like layoffs, inability to pay health care bills, or run-ins with debt-collection agents over the past year.

In Arkansas, where Senator Mark Pryor, a Democrat, has lost a once-healthy lead over Representative Tom Cotton, his Republican challenger, the unemployment rate has fallen to 6.2 percent from a 2011 peak of 8.1 percent. But the number of employed Arkansans, 1.2 million, is lower than at any point in the recession and recovery.

Republican governors struggling to be re-elected in Kansas, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and Georgia are facing the same economic headwinds, regardless of their party.

A George Washington University poll conducted last month found the economy to be the top issue on voters’ minds, with 71 percent saying their personal economic situation was either the same or worse than four years ago.

To Jason Spaulding, co-owner of the thriving Brewery Vivant on the fancier side of Grand Rapids, the pessimism is baffling. Four years ago he took over a funeral home, kept the stained glass of the chapel for his restaurant and set up brewing equipment in stables that once housed horse-drawn hearses.

Business has exceeded expectations. He expects to hit 5,000 barrels a year soon, and spends evenings arguing with relatives that the state owes much to Mr. Obama — to little avail.

“No one wants to give credit for doing good. They just want to talk about the bad,” he said, after a private chat with Mr. Peters. “But slowly things are getting better.”

New York Times – Full Story

Jonathan Weisman, September 12, 2014

Grand Rapids has nurtured craft beer lovers for around a decade now, calling all types of beer drinkers to appreciate the subtlety of just four ingredients.  Breweries have covered the region and bolstered the tourism and restaurant industries immeasurably.  Now, the spotlight turns to the next tier of craft beverage production as local businesses like Long Road Distillery come onto the scene to steal the hearts and palettes of Grand Rapid’s west side.

Jon O’Connor and Kyle VanStrien decided to bring the first micro distillery to Grand Rapids to share their own love for high quality spirits with fellow connoisseurs. Long Road is set to open this fall on the corner of Leonard and Quarry, in the heart of GR’s west side.

I immediately asked about the name for their business, and was pleased with how multi-faceted the answer was.  “First, Leonard St is a very long road, running from east of town all the way to the Lakeshore on the West. It also happens to be the longest traditional business district in the City, something we’re proud to highlight.  Second, and more importantly, the name Long Road Distillers speaks to the way we craft our spirits – the right way, taking no shortcuts,” says Van Strien.   “That means we will take the time to source our ingredients locally whenever possible in order to support and highlight the rich agricultural resources of our region. It means we will mill all of our own grain, and mash, ferment and distill all of our own spirits in-house.”

The building itself has had a long road to being distillation friendly.  As the second floor was formerly apartments, on top of century-old tin ceilings, O’Connor and Van Strien have worked carefully to maintain the historic integrity of the building, while crafting a destination for craft beverage lovers to flock to that can showcase the craft distillation process.

Educating the consumer about the process is at the forefront of the business plan to bring this craft to Grand Rapids.  While there will be small meat and cheese boards and light appetizer options for customers, the owners plan on continuing a partnership with their neighbors The Mitten Brewing Co. and Two Scott’s BBQ, a new venture set to open in the newly renovated Rootbeer Stand just across Leonard St.

For the drink menu, O’Connor was already able to hint at the goodness to come.  The first product will be a vodka distilled from local Red Winter wheat.  Vodka is a jumping off point for their two gin varieties, a traditional Bristish style and a unique style referred to as New American.  A good vodka is also an opportunity to utilize this region’s impressive agricultural offerings; a blueberry vodka will be the first infusion experiment of many.

Although all of those, and an Applejack as well, will be wonderful to round out Long Road’s spirits flights, O’Connor says that “Whiskey is what really got Kyle and I excited about distilling, however to craft a whiskey of any quality takes time aging in a barrel. Our production for aged spirits will begin right away, however as Un-Aged or White Whiskey is quite delicious and growing in popularity, we will offer both an un-aged rye and un-aged corn whiskey. The rye and the corn whiskies will, after spending a couple years in barrels, be released in the future as a straight rye whiskey and a bourbon.”

This is an exciting step for Grand Rapids and it’s great to see this city take that step from brew culture to craft culture.  “People in this area understand and appreciate the importance of a locally made product. We owe a lot of credit to all of the breweries who have helped create a culture of adventure in expanding the palates of consumers. People are curious about where their food and beverages are coming from, who made them, and what went into the process”, says Van Strien.

Experience Grand Rapids – Full Article

Lyndsay Israel, August 14, 2014

This fall Long Road Distillers, Grand Rapids’ first and only craft distillery, will join the ranks of established and upcoming businesses peppering the Leonard Street corridor.

The two story brick building, a former clothing store at 537 Leonard Street NW, is currently under renovation to house Long Road, which the entire operation- from milling the grain to pouring cocktails- will function. At approximately 8,000 total square feet, about 1,500 feet on the north ground level will be used for production space with the remaining 2,500 feet of space on the ground level dedicated as the cocktail lounge, seating up to 80 people.

The north end of the lounge will feature a glass wall encasing the 14 1/2 foot still that will be erected through the ceiling into the second floor. A second, narrower 25 foot still will be added within the first year. The 14 foot, 300 liter batch still is capable of producing 7,500 cases per year. With the second still added the total production will max out at 20,000 cases per year.

The second level will have a more laid back feel, with foosball and other games, and be amenable for group events with seating up to 120 people.

Production will start with red wheat vodka, which will serve as a base for flavored vodkas. A couple of varieties of gin from dry to citrus and floral, white whiskey, aged bourbon and rye bases will fill out the menu. Long Road is working with a local farmer to source red winter wheat, rye and corn.

“We’re selling you a craft product that we hope and we believe will be as good as any product you can buy anywhere in the world,” says co-owner Jon O’Connor.” “It’s a little more costly for us to do that, so we want to make sure that we can have that consistently high quality product that people will understand and appreciate and pay the premium price for.”

Their licensure allows Long Road to distribute, sell bottles out the door and do tastings.

“Initially our goal is to do everything we can right here and sell out the front door and in cocktail form whatever we can because we want to make sure that we can meet local demand and we’re not running out,” says co-owner Kyle Van Strien.

“We’re in the spirit business,” says O’Connor. “We’re not trying to get into the food business. But we know that when you have a cocktail you want to have something good to munch on along the way.”

To meet that need, the distillery will serve light dishes such as cured meats, cheeses, veggies, dips, sandwiches and desserts.

For patrons inclined more towards other alcoholic drinks, Long Road is applying for a microbrew license to provide at least one of their own beers on tap as an alternative. Adding to the variety will include ciders and possibly wine.

Both Van Strien and O’Connor have been west side residents since their college days nearly ten years ago. The two initially met while serving on the West Grand Neighborhood Organization board of directors. They collaborated to start the WelcomeWest non-profit that hosts the annual WinterWestevent.

Their commitment to the West Side is why Leonard Street is the perfect place to open the distillery.

“That’s why we’re here, because everything we’ve done in our spare time for the past 10 years has been for the West Side and in the West Side,” says Van Strien.

“We’ve been preaching the merits of the West Side since we’ve been in town,” says O’Connor.

Rapidian – Full Article

Eric Tank, July 1, 2014

The city’s west side is about to get a craft distillery.

The Grand Rapids Planning Commission approved Long Road Distillers last month, and co-owners Jon O’Connor and Kyle Van Strien said work is underway to rehab the distillery’s future home at 537 Leonard St. NW.

The 8,000-square-foot space will be renovated to include a retail space, cocktail lounge, kitchen and bar, overflow seating and the on-site distillery.

The floor plans have yet to be finalized, but Van Strien said he wants to make sure patrons have the opportunity to view the distillation equipment and be able to ask questions and learn about the process.

He estimated the initial investment to get the business up and running will be at least $750,000.

Nate Willink of Willink Construction will serve as the project’s general contractor; Neale Bauman of The Design Forum is the architect.

O’Connor and Van Strien expect to open to the public in mid- to late fall.

The pair said their products will not go into distribution right way, but they expect that to happen somewhere down the road.

“We want to be able to sell out the front door and meet the demand locally,” Van Strien said.

Long Road Distillers will start production with vodka and gin, adding white whiskey, whiskey and malted gin later.

All of the spirits will be “grain to glass,” meaning Long Road will start with grain purchased from area farms and distill the spirits on site.

“It’s very important to us, and we will be the only West Michigan distillery that is doing clear spirits from grain,” Van Strien said.

O’Connor said grain-to-glass production is both costly and time consuming.

“In order to get to the point where you can make vodka, per se, from grain, it has to go through a certain number of rectifications to get to a certain alcohol percentage,” he explained. “Most people don’t have the equipment capable of doing that.”

All of the distillery equipment is coming from Germany where it is made by hand, requiring a seven- to nine-month lead-time.

Once it is up and running at full capacity, the distillery should be able to produce 6,000 to 7,000 12-bottle cases annually, Van Strien said.

“With the addition of a new pot, we could significantly increase that,” he added. “In our first year or two, we will definitely be looking to expand our production capacity because we anticipate there will be demand for the product in the market and particularly when we want to go to distribution. We’ve had a couple of conversations with distributors and we expect that we will want that ability to make more and more.”

Pricing has yet to be determined, but the spirits will be in the premium category.

O’Connor and Van Strien agree the craft beer scene in West Michigan has laid the foundation for the introduction of grain-to-glass spirits using local ingredients.

“Founders and Bell’s have laid the foundation for the craft brew movement, and now Harmony and The Mitten and other local breweries have really helped bring people’s awareness to the local craft alcohol industry, so we think the market is primed for a craft distillery in Grand Rapids,” O’Connor said. “People have a real understanding and appreciation for wanting to know where their products come from and, hopefully, we can capitalize on the knowledge base.”

Long Road Distillers plans to work with area farms to source ingredients locally.

“We want to support West Michigan farmers and growers, and by doing this, we are actually going to be able to highlight the characteristics of the products that we are going to use to make our spirits,” O’Connor said.

The pair chose to become neighbors with The Mitten Brewing Co. in hopes of creating a synergistic experience. They don’t think it will be a competition as much as a complementary opportunity, giving patrons two great establishments next door to each other.

“It will be a real vibrant corner over here. It can be a destination,” O’Connor said.

The two men are west side residents and said they didn’t even consider locations other than on the west side, which they are excited to see finally receiving the attention it deserves.

In addition to spirits, Long Road Distillers will offer a small plate menu and a coffee and dessert menu.

The new business will employ between 20 to 25 people.

Grand Rapids Business Journal – Full Story

Charlsie Dewey, April 11, 2014

You can soon add craft spirits to Grand Rapids’ craft brewing reputation. The Grand Rapids City planning commission unanimously approved West Michigan’s second craft distillery on Thursday.

Long Road Distillers leased space on West Leonard Street and now they have the go-ahead to establish a micro-distillery, tasting room, and special event space.

Long Road Distillers will open this fall at 537 Leonard Street NW, across Quarry Avenue from Mitten Brewing Co.

In co-ownerKyle Van Strien’s eyes, Mitten Brewing Company is a Westside success story.

“They were an example of, they’ve done a great job, they’ve made it work,” he said.

Now he stands across the street from the Mitten, fresh of the city’s unanimous decision to move forward with his plans, inspired to turn an old brick building into a booming distillery. He and co-owner Jon O’Connor are long-time, active Westside residents.

“We’ve just been really passionate about the Westside, we love the Westside,” said O’Connor.

The city gave them the unanimous go-ahead to renovate the 8-thousand-square-foot space. The clothing company will move out, making way for a tasting room and special events space.

“We’re the first grain-to-glass distillery in the city,” he said.

“There will be barrel storage here, fermenters laying the wall, and our still will sit up in the tasting room and be glassed off so people can see it when they walk in,” he said.

Van Strien is excited for what customers will taste at the new Long Road Distillers.

“A really high-quality vodka, a gin, a clear whisky, and then a malted gin,” he said.

It’s all coming from Michigan farmlands. Flavored spirits will come later, along with distribution.

But the immediate concern now is parking. Some neighbors and businesses say there isn’t enough already and they went before the city with their concerns. Jamie Taylor represented her business, Grand Rapids Hydroponics, which is directly across the street from the Mitten.

“Their customers park in front of our store and they’ll be there eating lunch and stuff and it limits us because we have to carry those out and load their cars. And if they’re parks blocks away it can be a big issue,” she said.

Van Strien says they’re working to accommodate.

“Our deliveries, coming through our parking lot in the morning, by re-surfacing our parking lot and re-orienting it so there’s more parking spots.

He and O’Conner will add 11 spots behind the distillery and the church parking lot across the street will lease 25 spots. It already leases to the Mitten. They expect a crowd; it remains to be seen how congested the area will get.

“There’s a bus stop right there,” he said. “People can take the bus to get here and to go home.”

The owners say music will be an acoustic; nothing too loud. There’s a few restrictions. The bar area must close by midnight Sunday through Thursday.

WZZM – Full Story

Partners behind a fledgling craft distillery in Grand Rapids think the city’s reputation as a haven for craft beer drinkers plays well into their marketing of small batch vodkas, rums, gins and whiskeys.

Kyle Van Strien and Jon O’Connor, the two public partners behind Long Road Distillers LLC, have a vision to tap into local residents’ passion for quality, locally sourced beverages. 
Long Road Distillers has leased space at 537 Leonard Street NW, across Quarry Avenue from Mitten Brewing Co., with plans to invest $750,000 into opening a craft distillery at the site. The investment will go to renovating the 8,000-square-foot space and buying a 500-liter, 18-plate still — one large enough that it will be suitable for making vodka, Van Strien said.

The company’s mission is to be a true “grain to glass” distillery in Grand Rapids using as much locally sourced materials as possible, he said. They plan to make a full-range of spirits and experiment with local fruits and grain commodities used in the distilling process.

Long Road plans to sell bottles of spirits, offer tastings, serve cocktails in their bar and distribute products in the state, O’Connor said.

“Companies like Founders Brewing and (Mitten Brewing) have laid the foundation for quality beer in Grand Rapids, and we want to have that same quality in spirits,” O’Connor said. “We think there’s a sophisticated palate here that has an appreciation for distilled spirits. … We’ll never be to the scale where we’re making 100,000 barrels a year, but we can do small-batch innovation.”

The project is being internally financed with the help of a silent partner, Van Strien said.

Long Road Distillery and the holding company that owns the property, River Bed Investors LLC, go before the Grand Rapids Planning Commission on March 27 with applications for industrial facilities tax and obsolete facilities exemptions.

They plan to make $300,000 in property improvements to upgrade the facility – which dates back to the late 1800s – for production and commercial use, as well as buy about $400,000 in production equipment and furniture and fixtures for the tasting room, according to city documents.

“We want it to feel like a micro brewery. We want our place to be a destination,” Van Strien said, noting the initial plans call for a tasting room that will serve small plates, but not be a full-service restaurant. “We want to be a place you go to on the way to dinner and the place you stop on the way home from dinner.”

Long Road hopes to open by fall, but that’s dependent on securing the necessary local approvals, as well as the federal and state licenses. The company is buying specialized equipment from a manufacturer in Germany, which will also take six to eight months to make and ship to West Michigan, O’Connor said. The partners have tapped Willink Construction Inc. of Grand Rapids as their contractor and plan to have an architect in place soon.

While neither partner is a Grand Rapids native, they both came to the city for college and lived in the city’s west side neighborhood, which they described as an up-and-coming area.

“We want to be part of the change that’s happening here,” O’Connor said.

The pair say they are intensely focused on getting the approvals in place and renovating the facility so they can get into the process of making spirits, all of which will be produced in-house — not using outside contract producers. O’Connor said the company must focus on quality and ramping up production ahead of time to meet the demand they’re projecting.

They also plan to take time once they’re open to educate customers on craft spirits, Van Strien said.

“We plan to focus our marketing on consumer education and how things are produced,” he said, acknowledging that — as with craft breweries — the competition for consumers is intense from the established, international manufacturers in the spirits market.

MiBiz – Full Article

Joe Boomgaard, March 12, 2014

Entrepreneurs Kyle Van Strien and Jon O’Connor have some spirited plans to bring Grand Rapids its first neighborhood distillery and tasting room.

The pair and a silent partner purchased an 8,000-square-foot building at 537 Leonard St. NW on the corner of Leonard and Quarry St. NW, and have begun the process of converting it into Long Road Distillers, LLC, a full-on spirits distillery with customer amenities.

First, two upstairs apartments and a main level clothing store must be vacated, according to federal law. The building must be completely production-ready and a bond in place before the final licenses can be procured.

“We will be doing production onsite in about 2,500 to 3,000 square feet for production and storage,” Van Strien says. “We’ll serve cocktails and have the spirits tasting room in the front, with overflow seating upstairs. We’ll produce everything onsite. We want to take the microbrewery model and apply it to the distillery, and have people come and hang out and learn about how we source and make the products.”

O’Connor, a real estate broker and appraiser with West Michigan Appraisers, and Van Strien, project coordinator for Friends of Grand Rapids Parks, will be the head distillers and will work at the business full-time once everything is in place.

“Our goal is to source as much of our inputs from Michigan as possible; our vodka will have as much grain from West Michigan as possible,” O’Connor says. “We’ll start with vodka, gin, a flavored vodka, possibly a rum that will be sourced outside Michigan for the cane sugar, and an un-aged whiskey. We’ll grow into producing aged whiskey and rye, which take years to age. Smaller companies have the ability to push the envelope with experimentation and work with fruit, grains, and botanicals to provide flavor and sources for our products.”

No opening date has been set, but the guys are shooting for a fall 2014 opening, if the licensing and build-out processes fall into place.

Van Strien and O’Connor are good friends with Max Trierweiler and Chris Andrus, who own Mitten Brewing just across Quarry St. Mitten Brewing aims to triple its beer production by expanding into a second building on the same corner. Read the story here.

“We can’t sell their product, they can’t sell ours (because of licensing restrictions),” Van Strien says. “But we’re definitely excited about partnering with them and catalyzing economic development in the area. There’s a lot of new energy developing right there on that corner.”

Long Road Distillers goes before the Grand Rapids Planning Commission for a special land use permit on March 27.

Writer: Deborah Johnson Wood, Development News Editor

Rapid Growth Media – Full Article
March 13, 2014

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